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Influence of epidermal hydration on the friction of human skin against textiles.

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TLDR
Increasing skin hydration seems to cause gender-specific changes in the mechanical properties and/or surface topography of human skin, leading to skin softening and increased real contact area and adhesion.
Abstract
Friction and shear forces, as well as moisture between the human skin and textiles are critical factors in the formation of skin injuries such as blisters, abrasions and decubitus. This study investigated how epidermal hydration affects the friction between skin and textiles. The friction between the inner forearm and a hospital fabric was measured in the natural skin condition and in different hydration states using a force plate. Eleven males and eleven females rubbed their forearm against the textile on the force plate using defined normal loads and friction movements. Skin hydration and viscoelasticity were assessed by corneometry and the suction chamber method, respectively. In each individual, a highly positive linear correlation was found between skin moisture and friction coefficient (COF). No correlation was observed between moisture and elasticity, as well as between elasticity and friction. Skin viscoelasticity was comparable for women and men. The friction of female skin showed significantly higher moisture sensitivity. COFs increased typically by 43% (women) and 26% (men) when skin hydration varied between very dry and normally moist skin. The COFs between skin and completely wet fabric were more than twofold higher than the values for natural skin rubbed on a dry textile surface. Increasing skin hydration seems to cause gender-specific changes in the mechanical properties and/or surface topography of human skin, leading to skin softening and increased real contact area and adhesion.

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Citations
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Tactile friction of topical formulations

TL;DR: An instrumental evaluation method using tactile friction measurements to estimate perceptual attributes of topical formulations using instrumental methods instead of sensory testing is reported on.
Patent

Microclimate controlling fabrics and methods

TL;DR: In this article, the warp yarns and filling yarns are woven together in a plain weave to provide a pill resistant fabric having identical surfaces on both sides thereof, and each surface has a coefficient of friction that does not exceed 0.35 under both dry and wet surface conditions.
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Conformal sensor-based harmonic wave technique for in-vivo non-invasive monitoring skin water content

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Quantifying skin sensitivity caused by mechanical insults: A review.

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the scientific literature regarding different parameters attributed to the loss of skin integrity and linked with exhibition of skin sensitivity was conducted, with objective quantification of tissue responses using biophysical or imaging techniques.
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Role of Hair Coverage and Sweating for Textile Friction on the Forearm

TL;DR: A method of wetting the forearm of study participants in a controlled way with water results in similar friction as for the sweating forearm after physical activity, which allows for efficient studies of the role of skin moisture for friction including varying hair coverage of the skin.
References
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Book

Biomechanics: Mechanical Properties of Living Tissues

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the mechanics of Erythrocytes, Leukocytes, and Other Cells, and their role in Bone and Cartilage, and the properties of Bioviscoelastic Fluids, which are a by-product of these cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomechanics: Mechanical Properties of Living Tissues

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a sketch of the history and scope of the field of bio-physiology and discuss the meaning of the Constitutive Equation and the flow properties of blood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Epidermal lipids, barrier function, and desquamation.

TL;DR: A heterogeneous two-compartment model of the stratum corneum that ascribes a special role for intercellular lipids in the regulation of stratum Corneum barrier function and desquamation is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomechanics: Mechanical Properties of Living Tissues, 2nd ed.

TL;DR: This book is the second edition of the first volume in a series of three volumes by Y. C. Fung on biomechanics that summarizes the application of an enormously wide spectrum of mechanics and thermodynamics to physiology and the engineering of biologically related problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Moisturization and skin barrier function.

TL;DR: The present paper reviews the current understanding of the biology of the stratum corneum, particularly its homeostatic mechanisms of hydration, and discusses how each maturation step leading to the formation of an effective moisture barrier—including corneocyte strengthening, lipid processing, and NMF generation—is influenced by the level of SC hydration.
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